The Press

PM wants answers

-

The investigat­ion into the residency of a Czech drug smuggler hasn’t been good enough, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says. She was addressing news media in Dunedin yesterday ahead of her first Labour annual conference speech as the party’s leader this weekend. Her Immigratio­n Minister Iain Lees-Galloway has come under fire for granting residency to Czech national Karel Sroubek – a convicted drug smuggler, immigratio­n fraudster and known gang associate wanted in the Czech Republic for allegedly injuring a police officer. There were reports the Czech Republic would request his extraditio­n. But a spokesman for Justice Minister Andrew Little said no formal request had been received. Ardern said three weeks was too long for the investigat­ion, and she wanted answers ‘‘as quickly as possible’’. If it was found Immigratio­n NZ was not passing on the relevant informatio­n to the minister ‘‘we would absolutely need to rectify that, and to get to the bottom of that’’. The minister could only deal with the informatio­n before him, Ardern said. ‘‘It seems clear on the face of it that there is some contradict­ory informatio­n.’’ She had spoken with the minister, and the expectatio­n was the informatio­n had to be reviewed quickly, within three weeks. His informatio­n contradict­ed what was in the public domain, and she said the minister had gone back to his department to reconcile those difference­s. Ardern is due to address the Labour Party conference at the Dunedin Town Hall tomorrow. The conference starts today.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand